Convicted former Bronx Sen. Pedro Espada and his son are scheduled to plead guilty Friday in Brooklyn Federal Court, after reaching a deal on the remaining criminal charges they face in connection with looting more than $400,000 from a low-income health care network, sources said.

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Because of the brazenness of his looting, it's unlikely Espada will avoid prison time, sources said.

The son could escape with just probation because he will plead to much less serious misdemeanor charges, said the sources.

The elder Espada was convicted in May of stealing $448,000 between 2005 and 2009 from the Soundview Health Network — which he founded — to fund personal expenses like dinners, trips, home improvements and family parties. He faces 10 years in prison on each of the four theft convictions.

But after 11 days of deliberations, the jury deadlocked on four counts against the elder Espada and on all eight charges against Pedro Gautier Espada. They were expected to face a retrial.

There is no guarantee that Brooklyn Federal Judge Frederic Block will give anything more than probation. Both Espadas are expected to argue at sentencing that they should not go to prison because of their good works and that the Soundview clinic they stole from provided medical services to poor people in the Bronx for more than three decades.

But prosecutors proved Espada filled Soundview's board with cronies so he could use the nonprofit as his personal piggy bank. In recent years, the clinic missed payrolls, couldn't afford to replace aging medical equipment and was forced this year to stop seeing patients when it couldn't pay its malpractice insurance.

Both Espadas were scheduled to go on trial next month in Manhattan Federal Court on charges of not paying taxes on the money they stole, but the plea deal will cover that case as well, sources said.

"I expect to have a resolution of both matters Friday," Espada attorney Daniel Hochheiser said, declining to discuss the details of the plea.

"The senator is looking forward to moving on with his life and putting his legal problems behind him and his family," said Hochheiser.

The Daily News reported Thursday that lawyers for the disgraced former Democratic leader and his son were trying to hammer out a "package deal" for both defendants.

Robert Nardoza, a spokesman for U.S. Attorney Loretta Lynch, declined comment.

Sources said the father and son want to take their chances with the Brooklyn judge — who's seen as being more sympathetic to defendants — over hard-nosed Manhattan Federal Judge William Pauley, who is handling the tax case.